"If either Senator Clinton or Senator Obama is elected president, the rights of law-abiding gun owners will be at risk my friends
- and have no doubt about it," the Republican nominee-in-waiting told a crowd of several thousand.
McCain acknowledged he has been no darling of gun-rights advocates, having pushed through signature campaign finance legislation gun supporters say has muzzled free speech. The Arizona senator has also favored tighter restrictions for buying guns at gun shows.
Nonetheless, McCain said he expected the votes of gun owners in his general election campaign against either Obama or Clinton, the remaining Democratic presidential contenders.
"I supported campaign finance reform because I strongly believed our system of financial campaigns was influencing elected officials to put the interests of `soft money' ahead of the public interest," the senator said to silence. Soft money refers to unlimited contributions from wealthy individuals, corporations or unions.
"It is neither my purpose nor the purpose of the legislation to prevent gun owners or any other group of citizens from making their voices heard in the legislative process," he said.
"Those disagreements do not detract from my long record of support for the Second Amendment and the work we have done together to protect the rights of gun owners," he added.
Earlier, after visiting a gun store in St. Albans, W.Va., when he bought only a rod, bobbers and other fishing equipment, McCain said the only gun controls he favors are limits to keep guns from people with criminal backgrounds or indications of mental problems.
He added that, as president, he would sign a law that prohibited individuals from buying guns at a gun show without going through the same checks as those buying guns at regular stores.
McCain's visit to West Virginia, a general election battleground state, and his appearance at an NRA convention in Kentucky, were aimed at assuring gun owners a McCain administration would not infringe upon their rights.
In isolation, the questions about McCain's gun record could be troubling to a candidate vying for the votes of conservatives, former members of the military and residents in the South, where guns and hunting are prominent elements of the culture.
Yet in comparison to his potential Democratic rivals, McCain could be viewed as the most supportive of gun rights.